Design tips for complex forms. This is the shorter version that I gave in the main conference. There is a longer version with more examples available at http://slideshare.net/cjforms
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2. Versions of this presentation
• I gave this presentation as part of the Clarity 2010
conference in Lisbon, Portugal in October 2010.
• There is a longer version, for the pre-conference seminar
on Health and Social Services.
– More examples
– More tips.
• There is a similar version for APPU (Associação
Portuguesa de Profissionais de Usabilidade)
– Different examples
• All versions are available at:
http://slideshare.net/cjforms
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9. Tip:
Give them a form when they want a form
• The challenge:
– There are many different forms e.g. according to type of application, jurisdiction, eligibility
The idea:
– Make sure that you have a single decision page
– Get users answering questions as quickly as possible
• Examples:
– Finding a housing benefit form
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19. Tip:
Provide a list of materials for users to assemble
• The challenge:
– Users have to gather their answers from a range of different sources
• The complications:
– Users may not realise that they’ll need all sorts of bits and pieces
The idea
– Provide a list of the items that the users will need
Even better idea
– Get users to answer a series of questions about the specific items
• Variation
– Provide a cast of characters (people involved in preparing the form)
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22. Tip: Use a summary menu instead of a
progress indicator
• The challenge:
– It helps users if they can see how much they have done on the form,
but the form doesn’t ‘progress’ from screen to screen
The idea
–Use a summary menu so that users can choose
which part of the form to do next
• Example:
US government Central Contractor Registration form
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24. Tip:
Work hard to have great save/resume features
• The challenge:
– Users have to assemble data from several sources,
so they are unlikely to fill in the form in one session.
The idea
–Ensure that they can save the form and get back to
where they were without difficulty
–Have a retention policy
• Decide how long you will retain partially-completed forms
• Decide whether or not you will tell the user about this
• Example:
– In a review of job application forms on 6 top-rated UK local government web sites, only one
site had good save and resume features
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26. Tip: Avoid two-column forms
• The challenge:
– You have a large number of fields and the form looks dauntingly long
– It’s tempting to use two (or even more) columns to crush
the fields into a smaller space
The idea
– If your users will use the form constantly as part of their everyday
work, do contextual enquiry to find out whether a tightly-packed
layout will be more or less efficient for them
– If your users encounter the form infrequently,
avoid two-column forms
• Examples:
– Two-column forms are easy to mess up, giving a poor reading order
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30. Tip: Segment the form by topic;
and if multiple users are involved, by user
• The challenge:
– You have a large number of fields and the form looks dauntingly long
The idea
– Cut the form into smaller sections. It will seem less difficult.
– Don’t go crazy! You want chunks that are big enough to create topics.
• Example:
– not the most complicated, but a type of form many of us are familiar with:
the event submission
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